A method for displaying a multiple level visual index representing data records, comprises storing a plurality of data records and receiving a request to access the stored data records. The method continues by using index parameters to generate a multiple level visual index for the stored data records to be accessed. The method concludes by transmitting a graphical representation of the generated multiple level visual index.
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7. A system for developing a multiple level visual index representing data records, comprising:
a memory operable to store a plurality of data records; and
a processor operable to:
receive a request to access the plurality of stored data records; and
generate, using index parameters, a multiple level visual index for the plurality of stored data records to be accessed, the index parameters comprising a number of the plurality of stored data records to be accessed, the number of index levels to be generated, and the depth of each index level; and
transmit a graphical representation of the generated multiple level visual index, the graphical representation comprising a plurality of index levels concurrently displayed as an expandable graphical tree diagram, and,
wherein the index parameters are supplied by a user making the request.
1. A method for displaying a multiple level visual index representing data records, the method comprising:
storing a plurality of data records in a memory;
receiving, by a processor with access to the memory, a request to access the plurality of stored data records;
using the processor to generate a multiple level visual index for the plurality of stored data records to be accessed based on a plurality of index parameters, the plurality of index parameters comprising a number of the plurality of stored data records to be accessed, the number of index levels to be generated, and the depth of each index level; and
transmitting a graphical representation of the generated multiple level visual index for display on a graphical user interface, the graphical representation comprising a plurality of index levels concurrently displayed as an expandable graphical tree diagram, and
wherein the plurality of index parameters are supplied by a user making the request.
5. A method for displaying a multiple level visual index representing data records, the method comprising:
storing a plurality of data records in a memory;
receiving, by a processor with access to the memory, a request to access the plurality of stored data records;
using the processor to generate a multiple level visual index for the plurality of stored data records to be accessed based on a plurality of index parameters; and
transmitting a graphical representation of the generated multiple level visual index for display on a graphical user interface, the graphical representation comprising a plurality of index levels concurrently displayed as an expandable graphical tree diagram; and
wherein the plurality of index parameters are based at least in part on a number of the plurality of stored data records to be accessed and a number of data records that can be viewed at one time without requiring user scrolling, and
wherein the plurality of index parameters are supplied by a user making the request.
12. A system for developing a multiple level visual index representing data records, comprising:
a client; and
a server communicatively coupled to the client and operable to:
store a plurality of data records;
receive a request to access the plurality of stored data records from the client;
generate, using index parameters, a multiple level visual index for the plurality of stored data records to be accessed, the index parameters comprising a number of the plurality of stored data records to be accessed, the number of index levels to be generated, the depth of each index level, and a number of data records that can be viewed at one time without requiring user scrolling; and
transmit a graphical representation of the generated multiple level visual index, the graphical representation comprising a plurality of index levels concurrently displayed as an expandable graphical tree diagram; and
wherein the index parameters are supplied by a user of the client making the request, and
wherein the client comprises a display configured to render the graphical representation of the generated multiple level visual index.
2. The method of
3. The method of
4. The method of
generating an index file based at least in part on a number of the plurality of data records to be accessed;
generating a plurality of data files associated with the index file; parsing the index file to identify at least one target index;
if the target index is a leaf index, then identifying a data file associated with the leaf index and retrieving a plurality of associated data records;
if the target index is not a leaf index, then retrieving at least one child index and at least one sibling index associated with the child index; and
formatting the retrieved child and sibling indexes or the retrieved data records as tree node images.
6. The method of
8. The system of
9. The system of
10. The system of
11. The system of
generating an index file based at least in part on a number of the plurality of data records to be accessed;
generating a plurality of data files associated with the index file;
parsing the index file to identify at least one target index;
if the target index is a leaf index, then identifying a data file associated with the leaf index and retrieving a plurality of associated data records;
if the target index is not a leaf index, then retrieving at least one child index and at least one sibling index associated with the child index; and
formatting the retrieved child and sibling indexes or the retrieved data records as tree node images.
14. The system of
15. The system of
16. The system of
generating an index file based at least in part on a number of the plurality of data records to be accessed;
generating a plurality of data files associated with the index file; parsing the index file to identify at least one target index;
if the target index is a leaf index, then identifying a data file associated with the leaf index and retrieving a plurality of associated data records;
if the target index is not a leaf index, then retrieving at least one child index and at least one sibling index associated with the child index; and
formatting the retrieved child and sibling indexes or the retrieved data records as tree node images.
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The present invention relates generally to the field of data processing, particularly to a system and method for the automatic construction, retrieval, and display of multiple level visual indexes representing keyed data located in a database.
Conventional database management systems use indexing to facilitate user access to keyed data. Keys may be unique to particular files or records (social security number, vehicle identification number (“VIN”), etc.) or non unique (dates, student grades, etc.), and may have significance solely to the intended user of the application (e.g., a VIN to a car salesman using a dealership inventory application).
In large databases, a user query may cause thousands of keyed data records to be returned, slowing access to the desired data while the user filters and scrolls through the list of returned data. Furthermore, in network-based applications, rendering large amounts of data on the client computer is impractical and the increased network traffic and server usage greatly reduces system efficiency. Applying the search/filter/results methods used in Internet search engines, in which the user executes filter queries and accesses a virtual number of results pages one page at a time, requires, for a large result set, the examination of hundreds of pages before the desired record or file is located. Existing single level indexes are of extremely limited use for subdividing large amounts of data to allow for efficient location of desired data. For example, Sun's single-level Java Help Facility, which has separate indexes for the letters “A” thru “Z”, generates 3100 entries when the letter “A” is clicked.
In view of the problems and shortcomings associated with user interfaces for the retrieval, display, and interaction with very large result sets, the invention herein disclosed provides an efficient, user-friendly system and method for displaying keyed data using multiple level visual indexes. In one embodiment, a visual index facility creates index files for sorted data records on a database using pre-established index parameters. In another embodiment, the visual index facility creates index files using dynamically generated index parameters, depending on the size of the result set and the number of records/indexes that can be displayed on the user interface at one time. In yet another embodiment, the user interface is a client computer and the database is located on a server. In still another embodiment, the client is a computer running a web browser and the database is located on a server.
Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the following description and the accompanying drawings.
For a more complete understanding of the present invention and its advantages, reference is now made to the following description, taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Even data sets larger than the 10,000 students of the above example—which uses a three-level index of depth 10—may be rapidly navigated using appropriately constructed multiple level visual indexes, where the user may execute only one click more than the number of index levels to reach the required data. For example, a two-level index of depth 28 can index 21,952 data items, a three-level index of depth 12 can index 20,736 data items, a three-level index of depth 30 can index 810,000 data items, and a three-level index of depth 40 can index 2,560,000 data items. As explained in detail below, the index generation parameters—which include (1) the number of index levels to be generated; (2) the depth of each index level; and (3) the maximum number of data entries for each data file generated—may be supplied by the user or generated dynamically by the visual index facility based on the number of data records to be accessed and the number of records that can be displayed on the client's screen, and optimized so that the user does not have to scroll through lists of data or indexes.
Implementation of the visual index facility provides that the data to be accessed contains a unique key field and that this key field has meaning to the user of the application. Non-unique key fields, such as date and student grades, are not amenable to the creation of visual indexes, whereas unique key fields that have meaning solely to the user of the application, e.g., the car salesman accessing inventory via VIN number, are amenable to implementation of visual indexes.
In one embodiment, the visual index facility may be implemented in a client browser/server configuration with a data file generated from the index file in a markup language such as Extensible Markup Language (“XML”). An application programming interface (“API”) may then be applied to read the data from the data file of returned data. The API may be the Simple API for XML (or “SAX”) parser that handles XML data as a single, continuous stream of data and does not require the entire XML file to be stored in memory. The visual index is displayed to the user of the client computer using hypertext markup language (“HTML”) transmitted from the server.
If it is determined, at block 120, that no data access query was supplied, then a determination is made, at block 130, whether or not a sorted result set has separately been supplied. (The user may have run their own access routines to create a sorted result set.) If no such result set was supplied, then the method returns an error condition at block 150.
Once it has been determined that a sorted result set is available—either supplied by the user 130 or generated by the data access module 140—a further determination is made, at block 160, whether index generation parameters have been supplied by the user. If no index generation parameters have been supplied, at block 170, they are generated based on the size of the result set and, if known, the client's screen size. In one embodiment, the parameter generation algorithm is biased to produce depths corresponding to approximately two thirds of the client's screen size, minimizing the need for the user to scroll when selecting indexes for expansion.
Once control parameters (index generation parameters) have been established, at block 180, a routine is called to generate the index file based on the current result set size. Next, at block 182, a routine is called to generate the data file(s) associated with the index file. The format and relationship between the index file and data file(s) is described in more detail below with reference to
Once block 240, the retrieval of the child index and all its siblings, or block 270, the retrieval of the data records for a leaf index, have been invoked, at block 280, a determination is made whether or not to format the results as a simple vector of text strings or as HTML formatted for output as images within a graphical tree diagram. According to the result of this determination, the index or data records may be used to create a vector of text records, at block 282, and the formatted vector returned at block 286, or the index or data records may be formatted for output as HTML text with image bitmaps describing the graphical tree, at block 284, and HTML text returned at block 288.
As shown in
The visual index file 300 provides a hierarchy of visual indexes having pointers to one or more of data files 350 and 370. The elements “d” of index file “idx” points to a range of data file “dat” elements 372. The XML representation of data file 370 contains a single root element 352 containing 1 to N child “dat” elements 354. These “dat” elements do not have children. Each “dat” element will have an “id” attribute 356. The “id” attribute corresponds to the index file's “idx” elements “d” attribute. The content stored in the “dat” element 358 is application dependent.
A single visual index file 300 may have a maximum number of data entries, as defined by the index generation parameters, as shown in
A user of either a client personal computer 820 or wireless device 810 sends a request in HTTP format to a Web server application 825 that utilizes the visual index facility 830 for the creation and display of specified visual indexes. A session work directory 860 of the visual index facility 830 stores a visual index file 870 (e.g., such as the visual index files 300, 400, 510, and 602 described with respect to prior figures), and the associated index data files 880 (e.g., such as the data files 350, 370, and 705 described with respect to prior figures). As discussed above, in one embodiment, using data access module 890, the visual index facility 830 may be interfaced with data access protocols shown at 892 for accessing enterprise data stored using one or more of the applications shown at 894. The application-specific index definition file 850 contains parameters defining the indexes and information about the query to be executed by data access module 890, such as which data access protocol 892 to use, JDBC, SOAP, etc. Access protocol 892 executes the query on a remote or local database management system. Examples of common databases, DB2, Oracle, IDMS, Datacom, etc., are shown in block 894. As discussed above, the data access module 890 returns the result to the virtual index facility 830, which constructs and manages the visual indexes to be stored in the server and delivered to the user in response to the user's initial request.
Those of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the foregoing discussion of certain embodiments and preferred embodiments is illustrative only, and does not limit the spirit and scope of the present invention, which are limited only by the claims as set forth below.
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